James
E. Buttersworth
James E. Buttersworth was born in 1817 in Middlesex
County, England to a family of marine artists. After
producing brilliant paintings of principally British
sailing ships at a young age, Buttersworth moved with
his wife and family to the United States around 1845
and acquired an admiring following for his paintings
of American ships and yachts. His work incorporated
scrupulous and authentic detail, both of the boats
and their settings. His skill at portraying the beautiful
shapes of wind-filled sails, and the feeling of a
sailboat moving through the water, has never been
equaled.
Enticed by Prince Albert's Great Exposition at the
Crystal Palace, James Buttersworth returned to England
for the season of 1851, focusing on events at Cowes,
Isle of Wight that led to the August 22nd Race for
the Hundred Pound Cup, won by AMERICA. Buttersworth's
sketches and paintings of that yachting competition
provide the definitive record of events in that benchmark
season of sailing.
During the twenty-four year period of America's Cup
racing from 1870 through 1893, there were eight seasons
of racing. Buttersworth's paintings of the 1893 VIGILANT
vs. VALKYRIE II Cup match, done one year before his
death, completed the chronicling of America's Cup
races by oil painting just before the advent of successful
photographic imagery.